N. Korea fires 30 rockets into sea amid US-S. Korea drills

North Korea has fired 30 short-range missiles into the sea, South Korean military officials said, marking the second time in under a week that the isolated nation has done so amid ongoing joint US-South Korean military drills.

South Korea’s Yonhap news reported that the missiles were fired
in three consecutive groups and are thought to have flown
approximately 40 miles into the ocean. The exercise began at 4:00
a.m. local time from the east coast of North Korea, according to
the South Korean joint chiefs of staff.

It comes just days after South Korea said the North fired 25
short-range missiles 40 miles into the Sea of Japan. The US State
Department condemned the exercise, with spokeswoman Jen Psaki
asking Pyongyang to reconsider its actions.

The rockets, according to Reuters, are believed to be old
Soviet-developed FROG rockets that the small nation has had since
the 1960s.

While United Nations sanctions against North Korea do not
prohibit short-range missile tests, South Korea has called the
tests a “reckless provocation.” Pyongyang did conduct
its third nuclear weapons test early last year, perhaps inspired
by a successful 2012 long-range rocket test that much of the
international community said was intended display technology that
could be used on an intercontinental ballistic missile.

Both of those actions are banned under UN sanctions.

It is widely believed that the short-range tests are an armed
protest against the joint military drills between the US and
South Korea each year. The annual event began last month, when a
combined total of 12,700 troops from both countries simulated
air, ground, and naval training.

Despite Pyongyang’s concern, both nations claim the drills are
purely defensive. This year’s event came at a time of
uncharacteristically warm relations between the North and South.

Pyongyang and Seoul were unable for three years to agree on
conditions that would allow the reunions of families separated by
the 1950-53 Korean War. That changed last month, when elderly
Koreans traveled from throughout the peninsula to visit with
their relatives.

The international conversation was less sociable earlier this
week when China condemned a UN report that accused Pyongyang of
committing mass killings, torture, and other crimes against
humanity on a scale comparable to the Nazi-era atrocities.

Yet Chen Chuandong, a counselor at China’s mission at the UN
Human Rights Council, told Reuters the allegations were
“divorced from reality” because a North Korean
delegation was not there to defend the country.

Retired Australian Judge Michael Kirby, the chief author of the
report, said that North Korean Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un should
be tried in front of the International Criminal Court because of
prison camps that are believed to hold up to 120,000 people.

Still, Japan is said to have agreed to formal talks with North
Korea for the first time in more than a year. Formal dialogue has
been suspended since the long-range rocket launch in 2012,
although negotiations on a wide range of issues could continue
again as soon as next month.

“Our goal is to properly settle outstanding issues of both
sides,” Ryu Song-il, chief of Japanese affairs at the North
Korean Foreign Ministry, said, according to North Korea’s state
Kyodo News agency. “I believe it is important that relations
between the two countries can be improved soon.”